Saturday, July 20, 2013

Miniature 'panda cow' is born at Washington farm... and the bovine looks just like a Chinese bear

By Associated Press

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John Bartheld has been breeding miniature cows on his Washington farm for seven years, hoping to recreate black and white markings in the pattern of a panda to make a 'panda cow'.

He succeeded on June 28 when Peanut was born. From most angles, Peanut looks like the endangered Chinese bear with a big belt of white fur, a white face and black hair around the eyes.

Peanut never strays far from his mom, Midget, who was artificially inseminated.

John Bartheld holds Peanut, right, a miniature Panda cow on his farm in Roy, Washington

John Bartheld holds Peanut, right, a miniature Panda cow on his farm in Roy, Washington

Another panda cow born July 3, a half-sister named Star, has similar markings, but not as well-defined.

Peanut is different and he knows it, Bartheld said.

'He's got that cocky attitude. From the minute I laid eyes on him I knew he was something special,' he said Friday.

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'Peanut knew he was a superstar. It's just the weirdest thing. I've never raised anything with this attitude ? like he was born Tom Selleck,' Bartheld said.

'He struts around the field like he's in charge of the other calves and they follow him around. And he's not the oldest calf.'

Bartheld runs nine cattle and five are registered miniatures. Two, Peanut and Star, are registered with The International Miniature Cattle Breeders Society, which is a division of Happy Mountain Farm in Covington, Washinton.

Peanut's mother Midget, grazes in the background, as the 'Panda-Cow' runs in the foreground

Peanut's mother Midget, grazes in the background, as the 'Panda-Cow' runs in the foreground

Bartheld has been breeding miniature cows on his farm for seven years, hoping to recreate black and white markings in the pattern of a panda

Bartheld has been breeding miniature cows on his farm for seven years, hoping to recreate black and white markings in the pattern of a panda

The four other cattle are full-size cows sold as beef. The miniatures are a pet or novelty ? 'too expensive to butcher,' unless they grow too big.

'They butcher them all the time if they breed a miniature and it runs out 40-45 inches tall; it's considered a mid-sized beef.'

Bartheld grew up around his grandparents' dairy and the farm, now 11 acres, has been in the family four generations. He has a full-time job with a concrete company in Tacoma, but 'I always knew I was going to have cows.'

A miniature cow has to be under 42 inches tall at 3 years old. A panda cow has to have the bear-like markings, mostly the white belt around the midsection.

'A lot of cows have black eyes and white faces; the white belt really sets it,' he said.

Peanut has been getting a lot of attention since a few stories hit the Internet.

Peanut the Panda Cow was born on June 28 (pictured in foreground), making Bartheld successful in his mission

Peanut the Panda Cow was born on June 28 (pictured in foreground), making Bartheld successful in his mission

Peanut's parents are a mini-Hereford and a mini-American Beltie

Peanut's parents are a mini-Hereford and a mini-American Beltie

'It's gone bananas,' Bartheld said. He's hearing from people he hasn't talked to in 10 years.

'People drive by. They stop and back up and look. They love it,' he said.

Bartheld plans to sell Peanut, but he can't guess what he's worth. He said there are 30 to 40 panda cows in the world.

'Somebody's got to want a cow like that. I'd like him to be a mascot for someone,' Bartheld said. 'I think that would be kind of neat.'

Peanut also could be a sire when he grows to breeding age.

The real deal: The giant male panda inspired the farmer to recreate his cow lookalike

The real deal: The giant male panda inspired the farmer to recreate his cow lookalike

'He won't fit into my breeding program because they're all related to him,' Bartheld said.

Peanut's parents are a mini-Hereford and a mini-American Beltie.

He's got Midget the mom on the farm. The bull, Rebel, is at Happy Mountain Farm in Covington.

Bartheld says his farm is a solo operation.

'I have no kids. These things are kind of like my children,' he said. 'I feed them the best hay I can. They're well taken care of.'

Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2370656/Miniature-panda-cow-born-Washington-farm--bovine-looks-just-like-Chinese-bear.html?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490

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Go Inside Melissa Joan Hart?s New Nursery for Son Tucker

The Melissa & Joey star reveals her 10-month-old's new room with a pajama party courtesy of Disney Paint.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/Kcp_VhA7lQ0/

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Do faculty members share students' and parents' focus on jobs?

OMAHA, NEB. -- Only 49 percent of faculty members at four-year colleges and universities believe that their graduate school training prepared them well for their jobs as professors.

Perhaps that's why, suggested John H. Pryor of the University of California at Los Angeles, many professors may not place as high a priority as do students on the role of higher education in helping them find jobs. After all, many faculty members had to find jobs and try to succeed in them without much support from those who guided their education.

But Pryor, managing director of the Higher Education Research Institute at UCLA (which conducts numerous national surveys of students and faculty members), said that even if it's understandable that faculty members may not place a high priority on preparation for the work force, any disinterest in the subject could be dangerous to higher education. He outlined data from various surveys by his institute and others to show what he called a "mismatch" between faculty members on the one hand, and students and parents on the other.

At a time when many colleges are struggling for public support, and face new competition for students, he argued, this mismatch needs attention. (The presentation here Thursday was part of the Gallup Education Conference. Inside Higher Ed works with Gallup on surveys.)

The data Pryor reviewed showed that in surveys of students and parents, there is no question that the most important reason to go to college is to get a good job. In the latest survey of incoming freshmen at four-year colleges and universities, he noted, 88 percent agreed with this rationale, up by about 25 percent since before the recession of 2008 hit -- and by far the top reason given

It's not that faculty members don't care about helping students find jobs. But it's just not the top priority. In a 2011 survey of faculty members, the UCLA institute found the 78 percent of faculty members said that preparing students for employment was a goal for undergraduates. But that was the seventh most popular answer (respondents could pick more than one answer). More than 99 percent said that they believed a goal was to help students think critically (the most popular answer).

Other survey comparisons mentioned: More than 72 percent of incoming students but only 55 percent of faculty members believe that the chief benefit of a college education is increasing one's earning power.

The gaps also extend to more concrete curricular matters. For instance, in a new survey by the Association of American Colleges and Universities, 78 percent of employers reported wanting to know that graduates had used real-life examples in coursework. But only 55 percent of faculty members in the UCLA survey reported doing so.

And those faculty numbers may not reflect the way students experience their education. In the UCLA survey of college seniors (just before they graduate), 42 percent said that they believed their professors had given them chances to apply classroom learning to "real life" situations, and 29 percent said that they were satisfied with the relevance of course work to real life.

Pryor noted that faculty members are quite open to leaving campus for community work, but less likely to do so when it involves corporations (which may be more crucial to employing graduates). Eighty-eight percent of faculty members believe that addressing local institutions should be an important priority for their institution, but only 49 percent believe that of working with the corporate sector.

Erin Knepler, director of the P-20 Program at the University System of Maryland, presented with Pryor and said that the results suggested that colleges and universities need to involve faculty members more in discussions of what employers want. Currently, she said, presidents might visit with CEOs, and career center officials might talk to employers, but many faculty members do not.

She said that there is in fact common ground -- the AAC&U survey of employers found that they very much want to hire people with critical thinking and communication skills, among others -- but that most faculty members aren't in direct discussion with employers.

The audience here is a mix of administrators (who seemed generally sympathetic to the message) and faculty members, some of whom were skeptical. One asked whether there was room for liberal arts faculty members in such discussions, or whether this would help only engineering or business programs. Knepler acknowledged that, to date, most such discussions have been with business and engineering professors, but said that liberal arts fields would benefit as well.

She said that it would help professors to understand what employers mean when they talk about critical thinking skills, which might not be identical to what faculty members mean.

Another faculty member, who described himself as an advocate of service learning, said that it is hard to recruit professors for such projects (which in fact help students prepare for jobs) because they don't feel rewarded. Faculty colleagues tell him that "my tenure is based on my research and I need to produce.?

He said that if college leaders define better job preparation as part of the faculty teaching role, "maybe we need to realign the discussion around policy that allows professors to be good teachers and not just great researchers," he said.

The presenters agreed.

Source: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2013/07/19/do-faculty-members-share-students-and-parents-focus-jobs

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Government of Canada invests in safety at Canadian Rockies International Airport

CRANBROOK, BC, July 18, 2013 /CNW/ - David Wilks, Member of Parliament for Kootenay?Columbia, on behalf of the Honourable Lisa Raitt, Minister of Transport, today announced funding for an important safety improvement project at the Canadian Rockies International Airport.

The Canadian Rockies International Airport is receiving $33,715 through the Airports Capital Assistance Program (ACAP) for a runway condition reporting system which will enhance safety by providing timely, accurate and precise wireless reporting and recording of runway conditions.

"The Canadian Rockies International Airport is a vital gateway for local residents, businesses, trade and tourism," said MP Wilks. "This funding will enhance the safety of all those who use this airport, especially the communities and businesses in this region."

"The Canadian Rockies International Airport is a vital economic catalyst for the Kootenay Region," said Wayne Stetski, Mayor of Cranbrook. "The City of Cranbrook appreciates that the federal government continues to invest in airports through ACAP. This equipment will enable staff to send surface condition reports directly to NAV CANADA from their vehicles, making the information available to pilots more quickly during winter conditions."

To date, through ACAP, the Canadian Rockies International Airport has received more than $8 million for 13 projects, including today's announcement. Since the program started, the Government of Canada has invested more than $606 million for 751 projects at 174 airports. Improvements include purchasing/replacing heavy airside mobile equipment; installing wildlife fencing; and rehabilitating runway pavements, airfield lighting and electrical systems.

Canada's Economic Action Plan provides new opportunities for growth, job creation and long-term prosperity.? Thanks to the Government of Canada's leadership and our strong economic and financial fundamentals, the Canadian economy has recovered from the global recession better than most other industrialized countries.? Canada has been a leader among G-7 countries throughout the recovery with over one million net new jobs created since July 2009.

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SOURCE Transport Canada

For further information:

Media Relations
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613-993-0055

Transport Canada is online at?www.tc.gc.ca. Subscribe to?e-news or stay connected through?RSS,?Twitter,?Facebook,?YouTube and?Flickr to keep up to date on the latest from Transport Canada.

This news release may be made available in alternative formats for persons living with visual disabilities.

IF THERE IS A DISCREPANCY BETWEEN ANY PRINTED VERSION AND THE ELECTRONIC VERSION OF THIS NEWS RELEASE, THE ELECTRONIC VERSION WILL PREVAIL.

Source: http://www.newswire.ca/en/story/1200447/government-of-canada-invests-in-safety-at-canadian-rockies-international-airport

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Rome Braves: Victory slips away at SMS

WEDNESDAY?S GAME RECAP

Final: Legends 6, Braves 2?(at State Mutual Stadium)

How it happened: This loss was about as painful as it gets. The Braves surrendered the tying run with two outs in the ninth inning, and then allowed four runs in the top of the 10th en route to dropping the series opener to the first-place Legends.

Who did what for Rome: Edison Sanchez hit a solo homer in the fourth inning, his third of the season. Kyle Wren also drove in a run for the Braves, who were limited to five total hits in the loss.

Roster Move: The Braves announced on Wednesday that outfielder Daniel Carroll has been added to the roster. Carroll signed with the Braves as a non-drafted free agent from the Lincoln Saltdogs of the Independent League?s American Association. Carroll was hitting .303 with seven home runs, 30 RBIs and 22 stolen bases.

Source: http://romenews-tribune.com/bookmark/23154050

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Senators give AHL coach Luke Richardson and assistants one-year extensions

"I think Dom is a 100-per-center. If he does something, he's a 100-per-cent committed. I don't think he would've been a 100 per cent committed to playing hockey at that time. I'm so glad that he's back playing next year."

- Martin St-Louis on the return of Dominic Moore, who signed as a free agent with the Rangers this summer after taking last year off after losing his wife to cancer.

Source: http://thehockeynews.com.feedsportal.com/c/34166/f/621214/s/2eda851e/l/0L0Sthehockeynews0N0Carticles0C52880A0ESenators0Egive0EAHL0Ecoach0ELuke0ERichardson0Eand0Eassistants0Eoneyear0Eextensions0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Sebastien de la Cruz sang the National Anthem at game 3 of the NBA Finals, angry...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151762225570734&set=a.192844325733.171334.55549065733&type=1

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Senate ready to approve Labor Department chief

FILE - In this April 18, 2013, file photo, Labor Secretary nominee Thomas Perez testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing on his nomination. The Senate voted by the slimmest margin Wednesday, July 17, 2013, to end a filibuster against President Barack Obama?s choice to head the Labor Department, as this week?s agreement averting a poisonous partisan clash over nominations and the chamber?s rules barely survived its toughest test so far. By 60-40, senators rejected Republican objections and voted to halt delaying tactics aimed at killing Perez?s nomination to become labor secretary. (AP Photo/Molly Riley, File)

FILE - In this April 18, 2013, file photo, Labor Secretary nominee Thomas Perez testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing on his nomination. The Senate voted by the slimmest margin Wednesday, July 17, 2013, to end a filibuster against President Barack Obama?s choice to head the Labor Department, as this week?s agreement averting a poisonous partisan clash over nominations and the chamber?s rules barely survived its toughest test so far. By 60-40, senators rejected Republican objections and voted to halt delaying tactics aimed at killing Perez?s nomination to become labor secretary. (AP Photo/Molly Riley, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Senate was poised Thursday to approve President Barack Obama's choice to head the Labor Department after lawmakers, by the thinnest of margins, voted to remove obstacles blocking the confirmation while honoring a bipartisan pact for approving top nominations.

Senators were ready to confirm Thomas Perez as labor secretary by a likely near party-line roll call. After that, they were scheduled to debate Obama's selection of Gina McCarthy to become administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.

McCarthy, who currently heads the EPA's air pollution office, has helped craft rules aimed at reducing pollutants from power plants and other sources. Republicans have long criticized the agency for championing overly restrictive regulations that they say kill jobs.

Last week, Louisiana Sen. David Vitter, top Republican on the Senate environment committee, said he was dropping efforts to delay McCarthy's nomination after the EPA agreed to release more information about how it makes decisions. McCarthy has also faced opposition from Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., because of delays to a flood control project.

Perez, who leads the Justice Department's civil rights division, is considered too liberal by many Republicans. On Wednesday, GOP senators said they were opposing him because he has refused to obey a House subpoena demanding his personal emails related to a whistle-blower case against the city of St. Paul, Minn., that they have criticized him for dropping.

On Wednesday, the Senate voted narrowly to end a filibuster against Perez. All but six Republicans voted against Perez ? the exact number of GOP senators that majority Democrats needed to muster the 60 votes required to end the delaying tactics against Perez's nomination.

That 60-40 vote was the closest senators have come to unwinding this week's deal between the two parties that has averted all-out partisan warfare in the chamber over nominations and Senate rules. That roll call seemed to signal that while GOP leaders would deliver the votes needed to honor the bipartisan agreement, numerous Republicans were rankled by the pact and unhappy with Perez.

In exchange for the GOP halting filibusters against seven of Obama's top nominees, majority Democrats dropped a threat of a rules change that would have prevented opponents from requiring a 60-vote threshold to end filibusters of top agency appointees. That ability to wage filibusters unless the hard-to-achieve 60 votes are accumulated has long been prized and utilized by minority parties.

The other five nominees involved in the deal are Richard Cordray, whom the Senate confirmed Tuesday as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau; Fred Hochberg, whom the Senate approved Wednesday to continue leading the Export-Import Bank; labor lawyers Nancy Schiffer and Kent Hirozawa to join the National Labor Relations Board; and NLRB Chairman Mark Pearce, whom Obama wants to keep in the role.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-07-18-Filibuster%20Fight/id-6bf5b13193d04560a95ba5b4bc91e65e

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Video: Look ahead to Yahoo's earnings

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52486839/

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

UN: Some 5,000 Syrians being killed every month

UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- An estimated 5,000 Syrians are dying every month in the country's civil war and refugees are fleeing at a rate not seen since the 1994 Rwanda genocide, U.N. officials said Tuesday.

"In Syria today, serious human rights violations, war crimes and crimes against humanity are the rule," said Ivan Simonovic, the assistant secretary-general for human rights, told the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday.

He added that "the extremely high rate of killings ... demonstrates the drastic deterioration of this conflict."

U.N. refugee chief Antonio Guterres said two-thirds of the nearly 1.8 million Syrian refugees known to the agency have fled since the beginning of 2013, an average of over 6,000 daily.

"We have not seen a refugee outflow escalate at such a frightening rate since the Rwandan genocide almost 20 years ago," he said.

U.N. humanitarian chief Valerie Amos said at least 6.8 million Syrians require urgent humanitarian assistance and accused the government and opposition of "systematically and in many cases deliberately" failing their obligation to protect civilians.

"This is a regional crisis not a crisis in Syria with regional consequences, requiring sustained and comprehensive engagement from the international community," Amos said by videoconference from Geneva.

"The security, economic, political, social, development and humanitarian consequences of this crisis are extremely grave and its human impact immeasurable in terms of the long-term trauma and emotional impact on this and future generations of Syrians," she said. "We are not only watching the destruction of a country but also of its people."

Simonovic said that since U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay reported last month that at least 92,901 people had been killed between March 2011 when the conflict began and the end of April 2013, government forces and militias have moved to uproot the opposition in many areas including Qusair and Talkalkh, Aleppo, Damascus and its suburbs.

"Government forces carry on with indiscriminate and disproportionate shelling and aerial bombardments, using among other weapons tactical ballistic missiles, cluster and thermobaric bombs, all causing extensive damage and casualties if used in densely populated areas," he said.

"As a result, hundreds of civilians, including women and children were killed, thousands injured, and tens of thousands displaced," Simonovic said. "Many displaced in the parts of Homs and rural Damascus remain under siege and face miserable humanitarian conditions."

He said armed opposition groups have also committed acts of torture, abduction and kidnapping, sometimes along sectarian lines.

"Killings, violence and threats of reprisals against civilian populations perceived to be supportive of the government by armed opposition groups are escalating alarmingly," he said.

Guterres, the refugee chief, said "the danger that the Syrian conflict could ignite the whole region is not an empty warning."

Calling the impact of the refugee crisis on neighboring countries "crushing," he urged international action to support the stability of Syria's neighbors and reduce "the enormous risks of spillover" to the wider Middle East.

Guterres appealed to all countries to keep their borders open and receive all Syrians who seek protection.

Lebanon and Jordan are bearing the heaviest burden of the refugee exodus, he said, but the Kurdish region of Iraq and Turkey which has spent hundreds of millions of dollars of its own resources to assist over 400,000 refugees have also been affected.

"What I am asking for today is essential to mitigate the risk of an explosion that could engulf the entire Middle East, but only a political solution to Syria and an end to the fighting can fully stop this risk," Guterres said.

Syria's U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari said the U.N. death toll and refugee figures came from "unprofessional sources" and insisted the Syrian government was doing "everything possible to shoulder its responsibilities to its people and meet basic needs despite economic, political and media pressure."

He said the government is fighting "terrorism" ? its description of opposition fighters. He asked why the world was only concerned about 2,500 people trapped in Homs and not hundreds of thousands trapped elsewhere in Syria.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/un-5-000-syrians-being-133621983.html

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Why Democracy of the Ballot Threatens Stability in Africa

The turn of events in Egypt following the ouster of the country?s elected president, Mohamad Morsi is very regrettable, not only for the effect it has on Egyptians and the country?s economy, but also the entire Arab world.?Most commentariat have specifically argued that the army?s decision to depose Morsi, or is a coup? Could set a very bad precedent for the region?s burgeoning and still unsteady democracies.

Despite, military intervention has no place in democracy. Even the ineffective Africa?s continent body, African Union (AU) has made it a point of suspending Egypt?s membership until the military is out of the way. Forget the (ir)relevance of the AU suspension, it is the principle that matter in this case.

Tony Blair, the former British Prime Minister and now a Meddle East Envoy, who since his unpopular decision to accompany George W Bush in invasion of Iraq in 2003 has developed a curious and somewhat a shameless knack of jumping on unpopular adventures for personal gain, this time defended the military intervention. Arguing that the estimated seven million people that took to the streets left the military with no option but to intervene; claiming that otherwise the country was spiraling into ?chaos?. With hindsight, one would wonder if the ?chaos? could have been worse than what ensued after the military intervention. More than 50 pro-Morsi supporters have died; a lot of people have been injured; Morsi and scores of his party colleagues are still in detention; and Egypt is now a dangerously divided nation.

Tony Blair is of course completely wrong on the military intervention. Military has no role in civilian politics. The estimated seventeen million protesters were on the street demonstrating peacefully ? their democratic right. The army?s intervention has indeed undermined Egyptian democracy, not only by deposing an elected leader, but also by hijacking people?s zeal and determination to force out a leader they felt had failed them. I respect those who believe that Morsi should have been given a chance to seek re-election at the end of the four years term, but those protesting clearly felt otherwise, and I sympathise with their position.

I think it is a dangerous to set the idea that once elected leaders should see out their term, whether they are delivering or not. An election into a position of power is not a blank cheque. Leaders are elected to perform and deliver on specific issues. Employer must act when an employee is not performing, that is the principle. As culpable as Blair?s support on the intervention is, he got it right on this point:

?What is happening in Egypt is the latest example of the interplay, visible the world over, between democracy, protest and government efficacy? democratic government doesn?t on its own mean effective government. Today, efficacy is the challenge. When governments don?t deliver, people protest. They don?t want to wait for an election. In fact, as Turkey and Brazil show, they can protest even when, on any objective basis, countries have made huge progress. But as countries move from low to middle income status, the people?s expectations rise. They want quality services, better housing, good infrastructure, especially transport. And they will fight against any sense that a clique at the top is barring their way.?

Democracy of the ballot is a phenomenon that if left unchecked could blight emerging democracies on African continent. Many people have so far been contented with the right to vote for leaders of their choice, and they get it even where votes are tampered with. This is mainly a generation that grew up under dictatorships in Africa. It is therefore easy to see their appreciation for the right to vote.

This right is more precious to those that were starved of it for a long time. 20 years after majority of African countries, especially sub-Sahara, attained democracy, a new voting generation has come of age. This generation is demanding more than a right to vote. They want sound leadership that can deliver and are sensitive to people?s needs and demands. No wonder the ?Arab Uprising? has mainly been led by the youth. Stats are that 65% of sub-Saharan population is aged between 15 and 35 years of age. Yet 72% of this population is unemployment, and leaving bellow the $2 Dollar poverty line.

This is a grim fact that the turn of events in Egypt has masked ? it is not just about the military, seventeen million people took to streets demanding that the president step down. Democracies must be measured beyond the ballot box.On her visit to Africa, in August 2012, Hillary Clinton then a Secretary of State bemoaned African leaders? tendency for self-enrichment and reluctance to loosen their grip on power. She observed that there were still too many Africans living under autocratic rulers who cared more about preserving their grip on power than promoting welfare of their citizens.

At the time I wrote in agreement with Mrs Clinton at the time, I still do, and as I pointed out then, it is not only dictators, as she thought, democratically elected leaders were just as bad if not worse. Here is the only difference: Dictators spend a lot of resources, energy and time trying to fend of any possible rebellion and keeping their innercircle happy, as this article clearly states of Mobutu Seseko, the former Zaire president, now Democratic Republic of Congo. Elected leaders do likewise as they seek re-election or trying to secure presidency for their, son, brother, wife or any preferred successor; the case of Uganda today. It was the case with Malawi?s late Predident Bingu wa Mutharika who tried squeezed out his deputy, Joyce Banda to pave way for his brother Peter.

Consequently, these leaders have very little interest in the welfare of the people. This is by no means my invitation of people onto the streets, but unless the status quo changes, it will be na?ve to rule out Egypt-style street protests in at least some of countries bellow the Sahara.

Jimmy is an Academic, writer, news media & communications scholar. Interested in political and social changes in Sub Saharan Africa and Malawi in particular. Jimmy can be contacted through his email: j.kainja@gmail.com

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Source: http://www.africaontheblog.com/why-democracy-of-the-ballot-threatens-stability-in-africa/

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Senate steps back from brink in nominations fight

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., joined by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., right, speak to reporters after the Senate stepped back from the brink of a political meltdown, clearing the way for confirmation of one of President Barack Obama?s long-stalled nominations, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, July 16, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., joined by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., right, speak to reporters after the Senate stepped back from the brink of a political meltdown, clearing the way for confirmation of one of President Barack Obama?s long-stalled nominations, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, July 16, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky speaks to reporters as lawmakers moved toward resolving their feud over filibusters of White House appointees on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, July 16, 2013. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican senators, from left, Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., walk from the floor to a closed-door caucus after a compromise between the Democratic majority and the GOP minority on filibuster rules, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, July 16, 2013. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid credited Sen. McCain, with helping broker a breakthrough.The Senate just voted 71-29 to end a two-year Republican blockade that was preventing Richard Cordray from winning confirmation as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Senate majority leader Harry Reid smiles as he speaks to the media as lawmakers moved toward resolving their feud over filibusters of White House appointees on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, July 16, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and GOP leaders talk to reporters after the Senate stepped back from the brink of a political meltdown, clearing the way for confirmation of one of President Barack Obama?s long-stalled nominations, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, July 16, 2013. At far left is Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? The Senate stepped away from the brink of a meltdown on Tuesday, clearing the way for confirmation of several of President Barack Obama's nominees long blocked by Republicans, agreeing to quick action on unnamed others and finessing a Democratic threat to overturn historic rules that protect minority-party rights.

"Nobody wants to come to Armageddon here," said Sen. Chuck Schumer, the New York Democrat whose talks with Arizona Republican John McCain were critical in avoiding a collision that had threatened to plunge the Senate even deeper into partisan gridlock.

McCain, a veteran of uncounted legislative struggles, told reporters that forging the deal was "probably the hardest thing I've been involved in."

There was no immediate response from the White House, although Democratic senators said the terms of the compromise were acceptable to the administration.

Officials in both parties said they hoped the deal would signal a new, less acrimonious time for the Senate, with critical decisions ahead on spending, the government's borrowing authority, student loan interest rates and more.

Under the agreement, several of seven stalled nominees would win confirmation later in the week, including Labor Secretary-designate Tom Perez; Gina McCarthy, named to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, and Fred Hochberg to head of the Export-Import Bank.

Even before the agreement was ratified by the rank and file, Richard Cordray's long-stalled nomination to head the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau advanced toward approval on a test vote of 71-29, far more than the 60 required.

Two nominees to the National Labor Relations Board, Richard Griffin and Sharon Clark, are to be replaced by new selections, submitted quickly by Obama and steered toward speedy consideration by Senate Republicans. Obama installed Griffin and Clark in their posts by recess appointments in 2011, bypassing the Senate but triggering a legal challenge. An appeals court recently said the two appointments were invalid, and the Supreme Court has agreed to review the case.

In their places, officials said Obama intends to nominate Nancy Schiffer, a former top lawyer for the AFL-CIO, and Kent Hirozawa, counsel to NLRB Chairman Mark Pearce.

Pearce, awaiting confirmation to a new term, is the seventh appointee at issue. His pick is relatively uncontroversial, and he is likely to be approved along with the replacements for Griffin and Clark, if not before. The NLRB appointments, if confirmed as expected by the end of August, would prevent the virtual shutdown of the agency because of a lack of confirmed board members to rule on collective bargaining disputes between unions and companies.

"I think we get what we want, they get what they want. Not a bad deal," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.

"Crisis averted," said the Republican leader, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.

There was more to it than that.

Scarcely 24 hours earlier, Reid had insisted that if Republicans didn't stop blocking confirmation of all seven, he would trigger a change in the Senate's procedures to strip them of their ability to delay. At the core of the dispute is the minority party's power to stall or block a yes-or-no vote on nearly anything, from legislation to judicial appointments to relatively routine nominations for administration positions.

While a simple majority vote is required to confirm presidential appointees, it takes 60 votes to end delaying tactics and proceed to a yes-or-no vote. Reid's threat to remove that right as it applied to nominations to administration positions was invariably described as the "nuclear option" for its likely impact on an institution with minority rights woven into its fabric.

The same term was used when Republicans made a similar threat on judicial nominations in 2005 ? an earlier showdown that McCain helped defuse when it was his own party threatening to change the rules unilaterally.

As part of the deal over Obama's nominees, Republicans agreed to step aside and permit confirmation of several, some of whom they had long stalled. Cordray was first appointed in July 2011, but a vote was held up by GOP lawmakers who sought to use his confirmation as leverage to make changes in the legislation that created his agency.

McCarthy was named to her post in March, and Republicans dragged their feet, demanding she answer hundreds of questions about the EPA. At one point, they boycotted a committee meeting called to approve her appointment.

Perez, also nominated in March, is a senior Justice Department official, and was accused by Republicans of making decisions guided by left-wing ideology rather than the pursuit of justice.

As described by officials, the deal is strikingly similar to a proposal that McConnell floated in remarks on the Senate floor last week during an unusually personal exchange with Reid. At the time, the Kentucky Republican also said he had told Obama last January to drop his hopes of confirmation for Griffin and Clark and instead name two replacements for quick consideration. He relayed the same message again last month to Vice President Joe Biden, a former senator with whom he has a long relationship.

Tuesday's developments unfolded the morning after a closed-door meeting of nearly all 100 senators, many of them eager to avoid a rules change that could poison relations between the two parties at a time the Senate is struggling in an era of chronic gridlock. About three dozen lawmakers spoke in the course of a session that lasted more than three hours, and while few details have emerged, several participants said later it had been a productive meeting.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said she had urged others to "look ahead and think about the time when we would have a Republican president with Republican Senate and there could be someone appointed who was completely unacceptable to my Democratic colleagues and was nominated to run their favorite program" She said she asked if they "really want to give away their right to filibuster that individual."

Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., said the sense of history hung over the meeting, which was held in the Old Senate Chamber, where lawmakers had debated slavery and other great national issues for much of the 19th century. "Senator McCain talked about Webster, Jefferson and Madison. We knew that we were on sacred political ground," he said.

McCain told reporters that with McConnell's knowledge, he had been involved in talks for several days in search of a compromise, speaking with Biden, White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough and numerous senators.

"At least 10 times it came together, and then fell apart because there's always some new wrinkle," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Alan Fram, Charles Babington, Donna Cassata, Josh Lederman and Sam Hananel contributed to this story

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-07-16-US-Filibuster-Fight/id-facee077c9a84a8dbff19500af655876

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[DISCOVERY] Get your facebook status as "via GALAXY S4" [LEGIT]


fuser1337's Avatar Senior Member - OP

Posts: 413

Join Date: Nov 2012

Location: ?( ?_?) Here, Over here.



Flag

Carrier


I don't know if people know this already, but I decided to share this anyways, Don't forget to press thanks eh?

No 3rd party application, It can be done right through your S4

Follow the steps below:

  1. Open S Voice.
  2. Say "Facebook Update". It'll now ask "What would you like to update?".
  3. Say what you want to update. (If it detects some random other words and you want to type it, look below for workaround).*
  4. It'll ask, "Say update, cancel or say something new".
  5. Say update and it'll be done. Check, it'll show "via GALAXY S4".

*Workaround for wrong word detections :
ok, on step 3 if you see some words detected wrong, and S Voice says "Say update, cancel or say something new", just tap on the mic button once, Don't say cancel.

Now, tap on the bubble that you spoke as a status, you can now edit it. Now, if you press done, It'll be saying again "Say update, cancel or say something new". Say update

I Dare you press this button (????)?????

Please press the "Thanks" button on the bottom-left, if I ever helped you

Source: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2364107&goto=newpost

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Return of Microsoft Bob? Bill Gates sees new chance for personal agents

virtual

20 hours ago

Microsoft Bob

Microsoft

Microsoft Bob's glasses are still in, even though his software isn't.

REDMOND ? Bill Gates opened his talk at the Microsoft Research Faculty Summit Monday by saying we?ve entered a ?golden age of computing,? as connectivity, data and processing power open up new opportunities to solve some of the world?s biggest problems.

Which paves the way, of course, for the return of Microsoft Bob.

OK, not really, but in response to one question, the Microsoft chairman did refer to the company?s ill-fated virtual Windows assistant, circa 1995, as an early example of a ?personal agent? helping lead us through our daily tasks.

The potential is much richer today, Gates said.

He explained, ?It?s been talked about for decades, and now really is possible ? where we see where you?re going, we see your calendar, we see your various communications. ? We can actually look at the text, look at the speech, try to be helpful to you in your activities. I think we will be more connected and therefore if somebody wants to do a task like find a gift of a certain type, organize a trip in a certain way, there will be a closer match ? that is, the gap between what the software can do for them and what most people end up doing, that could be reduced.

?But you always make mistakes on these things. When the machine tries to do the table with numbers, or the dog comes up and says, ?Oh, you didn?t do this thing right,? Microsoft Bob-style. A long time ago we tried a little personality that was definitely premature. I think it will re-emerge, but perhaps with a bit more sophistication. We were just ahead of our time, like most of our mistakes.?

Apple has tried to tackle this problem in recent years with its Siri personal assistant for iOS, whose web search results will be powered by Microsoft?s Bing search engine in iOS 7, the upcoming revamp of Apple?s mobile operating system.

More from GeekWire:

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2eb358d8/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Creturn0Emicrosoft0Ebob0Ebill0Egates0Esees0Enew0Echance0Epersonal0Eagents0E6C10A644547/story01.htm

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Health & Fitness Toolkit Giveaway - Flourish

H&F Toolkit

As most of you know, I am a Fitness Coach with Team?Beachbody, and I absolutely?love?the quality and integrity of?this company! So, I have prepared an awesome Beachbody Sampler, which I?m calling the ?Health & Fitness Toolkit? for one?very blessed?reader to help her on her health and fitness journey!

(The winner will receive all the contents of this toolkit in the picture above, shipped to them?Priority Mail. Sorry, basket not included.)

This?Health & Fitness Toolkit contains each of the following?brand new, unopened?items:

  • Thin Kitchen?Recipe Book,?Beachbody?s?exclusive diet and nutrition guide. This book is filled with a wide variety of tasty recipes that allow you to eat right and satisfy your senses at the same time. It also includes recipes from Beachbody celebrity trainers, Tony Horton, Shaun T, Chalene Johnson, and more! ?(Retail value: $20)

ThinKitchen-lrg

  • Body Gospel:?Sweat and Sculpt?DVD ??Sculpt your body and burn more fat with this intense 20-minute resistance band workout. Energized by uplifting Praise and Worship music, you?ll increase your metabolism and get lean fast.?(Retail value: $19.95)

BGsweatandsculpt

  • Body Gospel Walking Bands ??Work your upper and lower body at the same time to help you shed fat, firm muscle, and increase total-body toning. Don?t underestimate using these bands in place of dumbbells?? they really?work! And they are necessary for?the Sweat and Sculpt DVD.?(Retail value: $9.95)

BGbands

  • Les Mills Combat 30: Live ? Combat is my new favorite workout (but I say that each time I get a new Beachbody workout ? they?re all excellent!) This live class is designed to carve leaner arms, shoulders, and upper back, while delivering explosive leg training and high-intensity cardio to accelerate your metabolic burn. (Retail value: $19.95)

250x250_cmbt_30_large

  • TurboFire Greatest HIITs ? This DVD is a remix of Chalene Johnson?s hottest Fire Drills or ?HIIT? (High Intensity Interval Training) classes, and will help you burn up to 9x more fat than with traditional cardio. You?ll perform bursts of cardio at your highest intensity level to ignite your metabolism.?(Retail value: $19.95)

tf-250x250

  • Sample Packet of chocolate Shakeology???Simplify your nutrition with Shakeology, ?the Healthiest Meal of the Day.? You will love this delicious, nutrient-dense, superfood shake! Simply replace one meal a day with Shakeology to help increase your energy, reduce cravings, lose weight, and feel great.?(Retail value: $5.40)

shakes w-vanilla

  • ?Shakeology Shaker Cup ??The 20-oz Shakeology Shaker Cup is stylish, yet sturdy, and capable of mixing one scoop of Shakeology with water in just a few shakes. These cups are ideal for Shakeologists on the run!?(Retail value: $6.95)

shaker cup

This Health & Fitness Toolkit is valued at over?$100, and will help you get a head start on your fitness journey! The giveaway is open through Friday, July 19th, 11:00 PM (Eastern). I will announce the winner on Monday, July 22nd.

After you enter through Giveaway Tools below, please be sure to visit my blogging friends at iHomeschool Network who are participating in this ?Back to School Toolkit Giveaway? to enter for a chance to win their goodies!

iHN-Back-to-School

?Subscribe to?Flourish?so you don?t miss another post!

About

Alisha Gratehouse is a minister?s wife, the mother of three awesome kids, and a fitness coach. Her days are filled with writing, homeschooling, drinking tea, and encouraging others to live abundant and satisfying lives (John 10:10). She believes that everyone has a God-given purpose to fulfill, and that in order to fulfill that purpose, they must care for the temple God gave them.

Related posts:

Source: http://alishagratehouse.com/health-fitness/health-fitness-toolkit-giveaway/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=health-fitness-toolkit-giveaway

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Tegra Android Development Pack 2.0 Available

The?Tegra Android Development Pack(TADP) is the perfect companion for developing native Android applications, installing all of the software tools required to optimize for?NVIDIA?s Tegra platform. ?

TADP 2.0 allows you to pick and choose the tools you want to install, from the Android SDK to Tegra Android Operating System images, all dynamically, minimizing the time you spend hunting for the right software versions and downloading files. Choose between Express, Complete or Custom installations to tailor the development environment to your specific needs.

This release includes the preview release of Nsight? Tegra?, Visual Studio Edition, bringing the raw development power and efficiency of Microsoft Visual Studio to Android, giving you the right tools for the job. Flexible project management, accelerated compilation and integrated debugging, no need to massage makefiles and shell scripts, no voodoo magic or arcane incantations required. It also includes an updated PerfHUD ES 1.9.7, which includes numerous accuracy, performance and stability enhancements. To learn more, check out the PerfHUD ES homepage. See below for a complete list of updates to TADP 2.0.

To download TADP 2.0, you must be a member of the Tegra Registered Developer Program. To join simply create a new account (it's free and easy) and then visit Develop for Tegra or the Tegra Resources page.

TEGRA ANDROID DEVELOPER PACK 2.0

Android Development:

  • Android SDK r18
  • Android APIs
  • Google USB Driver
  • Android NDK r8
  • JDK 6u24
  • Cygwin 1.7
  • Eclipse 3.7.1
  • CDT 8.0.0
  • ADT 18.0.0
  • Apache Ant 1.8.2
  • Python 2.7

Tegra Libraries and Tools:

Tegra Samples, Docs and OS Images

  • Tegra SDK Samples
  • Tegra SDK Documentation
  • Tegra Android OS Images for Cardhu, Ventana and Enterprise development kits

?

Enjoy!

Jones/

@nvidiajones

?

Source: http://developer.nvidia.com/node/565862

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Kenny Perry shoots 63 to win US Senior Open

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) ? Kenny Perry is getting the hang of these majors. He only wishes it had happened sooner.

Perry completed a masterful performance with a 7-under 63 on Sunday that gave him a five-shot win over Fred Funk in the U.S. Senior Open.

The 52-year-old Kentuckian won his second straight senior major with a flurry. His 64-63 finish and the 10-shot deficit he overcame after 36 holes set tournament records. His 13-under total of 267 matched the lowest four-round score.

"It all came together. Why, after all these years?" Perry said. "Here I am, (almost) 53 years old, and it finally came together for me."

On the regular tour, Perry won 14 times but was best known for collapses in the 2009 Masters and 1996 PGA Championship. Those memories haunted him again in May when he squandered a three-shot lead with six holes to play in the Senior PGA Championship and lost by two to Kohki Idoki.

Just as he did two weeks ago in the Senior Players Championship at Fox Chapel, Pa., where he won by two shots over Fred Couples and Duffy Waldorf, Perry came from well behind to win in the hills and heat at the par-70 Omaha Country Club.

"This is by far the biggest tournament I ever won," Perry said. "I lost the playoff at the Master's and the PGA playoff. I didn't get the job done. Now to have a USGA title, it's an Open, it's our Open, it's what the players play for.

"To finally get it, even though it's a Senior Open, I still regard it as a very high honor."

Perry, who started Sunday two shots behind leader Michael Allen, was in front to stay after he birdied the second and third holes and Allen bogeyed the third.

Perry's 63 matched Allen's Friday score for best round of the tournament and was the best ever in a U.S. Senior Open final round.

"He put it to us," Funk said. "Six under yesterday, seven today, back-to-back. It's kind of what he did two weeks ago at Fox Chapel. He just smoked the field on the weekend. He just lapped us."

Perry made par over the last three holes. A wide smile crossed his face as he tapped in for par on 18. He dropped his putter, raised both arms and waved his visor to the gallery.

Perry is the ninth player to win consecutive senior majors. He said he wouldn't go for three in a row. He's staying home to rest rather than play the British Senior Open in two weeks.

Perry had six birdies and one bogey on his way to a 5-under 30 on the front nine Sunday. He started a run of four straight birdies when he blasted out of the sand to within 5 feet on No. 6.

By the time he made the turn, he was three shots ahead of the fading Allen.

Things momentarily got interesting when Rocco Mediate made a 10-foot putt on No. 15 for his third straight birdie to get within two shots. Over on the par-5 14th, Perry was buried in the left rough. He chipped into the fairway and was left with 130 yards to the pin.

He knocked his wedge within a foot, yelling "Be right" as his ball plopped onto the green and rolled toward the cup. After the tap-in, another birdie on No. 15 and Mediate's bogey on 16, Perry's lead was up to five and he was well on his way to his fourth win since he joined the Champions Tour in 2010.

Perry said Mediate's late run helped him keep his focus.

"I was like, 'Oh, oh, we've got to keep going. We've got to put the hammer down and work on out,' " Perry said. "Sometimes when you get leads, you kind of hang onto that lead. I didn't want that cushion. I wanted to push it on out there. I wanted a five-shot lead coming down to the last hole."

Funk, the 2009 champion, was runner-up for the second straight year and third time since 2008. He was tied with Perry after the third round but couldn't make much headway, shooting a final-round 68.

Mediate (66) and Corey Pavin (67) tied for third at 7-under 273.

The 54-year-old Allen needed acupuncture treatments for a pinched nerve in his neck to be able to play the last three rounds. His five-shot lead through 36 holes was the largest in tournament history. He followed his course-record 63 on Friday with a pair of 72s that left him in fifth place.

"Today's round was probably the greatest round I've ever played," Perry said. "I just was spot on with all my irons. I putted like Ben Crenshaw. It's just been a remarkable month. I've had a great run."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kenny-perry-shoots-63-win-us-senior-open-215735365.html

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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Cattle Outlook: U.S. beef to Japan at highest level in a decade

U.S. beef exports to Japan in May were at their highest level since October 2003, and beef shipments to that market are up 50% vs. year ago for the first five months of 2013. Other markets are not faring quite as well, however, and total U.S. beef exports are trailing year ago levels by 2%. Russia's ban on meat containing ractopamine has basically brought a halt to all shipments there, and beef exports to both Mexico and Korea are down nearly 25%, adding to the overall weakness. The fact that the weakening of the U.S. dollar against many major currencies has slowed considerably or even reversed in the past few quarters is contributing to the slowdown.

Cow The U.S. corn harvest is still projected by USDA to be record large, 6.6% above the previous high recorded in 2009. This should help feedlots be able to both increase the prices they pay for feeder animals and still improve what has been a long stretch of difficult financial times since crop prices spiked. Whether higher calf prices can overcome the worsening drought in the western U.S. and lead to beef cow herd expansion in the next few months is still in question.

It was another rough week for boxed beef cutout values, as the choice cutout declined every day this week. The Friday morning choice value was $191.86/cwt, down $4.48 for the week and nearly $20/cwt lower than the record high posted on May 23. The select carcass cutout was at $184.02/cwt, down $3.71 for the week.

Despite rather sharp declines in the cutouts, fed cattle prices were mixed this week. Through Thursday, the 5-area average price for slaughter steers sold on a live weight basis was $121.24/cwt, up $1.66 from last week and up $6.56/cwt from the same week last year. Steer prices on a dressed basis averaged $191.73/cwt this week, down 86 cents from a week ago but up $9.57 from a year ago.

This week's cattle slaughter totaled 640,000 head, up 81,000 head from last week's Independence Day shortened schedule, but down 5,000 head from a year ago. The average steer dressed weight for the week ending on June 29 was 855 pounds, up 1 pound from last week but down 1 pound from last year.

Oklahoma City feeder cattle prices were $3-5 higher this week, except for 900 pounds and up which advanced by up to $10. Prices for medium and large frame #1 steers were as follows: 400-450# $177-$195.50, 450-500# NQ, 500-550# $166-$177.50, 550-600# $146-$171, 600-650# $144.50-$164, 650-700# $142-$159.75, 700-750# $135-$156, 750-800# $137.25-$150.50, 800-900# $138.50-$149.85, and 900-1000# $127.35-$142.60/cwt.

The August live cattle futures contract closed at $122.10/cwt today, up 15 cents from last week's close. The October fed cattle contract gained 5 cents from last Friday to settle at $126.30/cwt. December ended the week at $128.425/cwt.

August feeder cattle futures settled at $150.40/cwt, down $1.40 for the week. The September contract lost $1.17 from last Friday to close at $153.00/cwt. October settled at $154.70/cwt.

Source: Ron Plain and Scott Brown

Source: http://www.cattlenetwork.com/cattle-news/markets/feeder-cattle/Cattle-Outlook-US-beef-to-Japan-at-highest-level-in-a-decade-215281641.html

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Investigators probe the cause of Dreamliner fire in London

Updated July 13, 2013 23:15:20

Investigators have begun searching for the cause of a fire onboard a 787 Dreamliner parked at London's Heathrow airport, which raises further questions about the safety of Boeing's next-generation jet.

A team from Britain's Air Accident Investigation Board (AAIB) was deployed following the blaze on Friday afternoon on the Ethiopian Airlines plane, which was fortunately empty at the time.

"The aircraft was moved to a secure hangar early this morning. The investigation is ongoing," a spokesman for the AAIB, said.

The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said it had also sent an official to support the work of the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) in Britain.

Ethiopian Airlines said smoke was detected coming from the plane after it had been parked at Heathrow for more than eight hours.

Dreamliner's turbulent history

  • July 12: An Ethiopian Airlines 787 catches fire while sitting on tarmac at London's Heathrow airport for eight hours
  • July 12: Dreamliner operated by Thomson Airways returns to UK as a precaution due to technical issues
  • January 16: An ANA Dreamliner passenger plane makes an emergency landing in Japan after smoke is reportedly seen inside the cockpit.
  • January 14: Japan's transport ministry says it has begun examining the Dreamliner that suffered two fuel leakages in less than a week.
  • January 13: A Japan Airlines (JAL) 787 suffers a fuel spill for the second time in a week.
  • January 11: US regulators announce an in-depth safety review of the Dreamliner after a spate of incidents involving the aircraft.
  • A crack in a cockpit windshield grounds an ANA Dreamliner after a domestic flight in Japan.
  • An ANA Dreamliner, also on a domestic Japanese flight, experiences a delay due to an oil leak.
  • January 9: ANA cancels a Dreamliner flight because of a brake problem.
  • January 8: A Japan Airlines 787 flight to Tokyo is grounded in Boston following a fuel spill.
  • January 7: A fire breaks out aboard an empty Japan Airlines 787 Dreamliner in Boston.

"The aircraft was empty when the incident was observed. The cause of the incident is under investigation by all concerned," it said in a statement.

A spokesman for Ethiopian Airlines said it was investigating the incident but had no plans to ground its fleet of four 787 Dreamliners.

"Ethiopia's Dreamliners will continue to fly," spokesman Hailu Teklehaimanot said.

"The incident at Heathrow is not being treated as flight related as the incident happened after being grounded for eight hours."

It is a blow for Boeing, which had to temporarily withdraw the Dreamliner from service earlier this year after concerns that batteries on board could cause fires.

The US aviation giant has since rolled out modifications it said would ensure the planes were safe.

Boeing's shares closed 4.7 per cent lower at $101.87 in New York trading on Friday, clawing back from a dive of more than seven per cent.

The fire caused Heathrow to shut down for 90 minutes, and the world's busiest international passenger air hub was still reporting related delays on Saturday.

"The airport is fully operational but with some flight delays and cancellations," Heathrow said in a statement.

A spokeswoman said that about 40 flights had been cancelled throughout the day, largely due to aircraft being out of place, but said delays to other flights were "minimal".

In a separate incident on Friday, Britain's Thomson Airways said one of its Dreamliners flying from Manchester to Florida was forced to turn back after experiencing a "technical issue" after take-off.

A global grounding order on the Dreamliner was issued in January after lithium-ion batteries overheated on two different jets, with one of them catching fire while the aircraft was parked.

Boeing has not been able to identify the root cause of the problems - a source of major embarrassment to the company - but said its modifications would prevent the problems reoccurring.

In April, an Ethiopian Airlines Dreamliner - reported to be the same plane that caught fire at Heathrow - flew from Addis Ababa to Nairobi on the first commercial flight since the grounding.

But the planes have been dogged by problems, with a string of flights worldwide cancelled or diverted due to mechanical issues.

AFP

Topics: air-transport, air-force, defence-forces, defence-and-national-security, industry, business-economics-and-finance, accidents---other, accidents, disasters-and-accidents, united-kingdom

First posted July 13, 2013 22:28:43

Source: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-07-13/investigators-probe-dreamliner-fire-in-london/4818794

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